Cancer-versary Is the Latest in Medical Sharing Parties

When it comes to cancer, patients always have reoccurrence in their minds, so Gabriel provides resources for them through his foundation, Pink Pathways, a professional mentor coaching program designed to support what he calls "breast cancer thrivers."

"I had a patient who was doing well for two years and I sent her to the foundation program," he said. "She came in and said she knew something was wrong. Quizzing her, she breaks down. She had not told anyone, not even her relatives. She said, 'The cancer scares me. Every time I get a pain, I think the cancer has come back. So much goes on in these poor ladies heads, it's heartbreaking."

Often, patients go through surgery, chemotherapy and radiation, and when it's over, "everything stops -- no one cares anymore," said Gabriel.

Relationship problems set in, divorce rates go up.

When things are going well, a party can be a spirit lifter. Some of his patients with the most virulent cancers set smaller markers for celebrations.

"Very aggressive cancers can recur in the early period, so it's important to set a milestone," he said. "If you reach the five-year mark, you can breathe a bit. But with recurrence high, you can't breathe, you can't relax. Some celebrate at one year."

One of his patients was 26 when she was diagnosed with breast cancer and her boyfriend left her. After a lumpectomy she was so worried about the cancer coming back that she had both breasts removed. Now, she is married and planning a family.

"She said that having an anniversary party brought them closer together," said Gabriel.

But, he said, women worry about jinxing their survival.

"It's always in the back of their head," he added.

"I bring this topic up with them," he said. "You are having this party and what if all of a sudden it comes back. Well, if it comes back, they say they will deal with it. It's important they believe in themselves. Cancer takes an emotional toll."

As for Kandel, getting a cancer diagnosis just as she turned 50 stopped her life dead in its tracks.

"I felt on top of my game: I exercise, I don't smoke or drink, and everything was in great shape," she said. "I had just sent my kid off to college."

When the doctor told her the lump was cancer, "I burst into tears," Kandel said. "I didn't know where to go or what to do."

After a lumpectomy she underwent chemotherapy.

"The worst thing was losing my hair," she said. "I had no nausea because now they have great meds ... I felt very lucky."

As each year passed, she remained healthy -- and thankful.

"Every year on my cancer-versary, the day surgery had it taken out of me, I would post something on Facebook," said Kandel. "It feels a little self-indulgent, but I am happy I have passed another year. I know I am going to get warm wishes and people like to celebrate with you. Everyone is so kind and wonderful. I get pages of congratulations, and it makes me feel so good. It's a boost."

As her five-year anniversary approached, she knew it was a "big deal" medically.

"I just wanted to do something to note this day," she said, "and I saw somewhere about gratitude gatherings, and thought, 'That's exactly what I want.'"

On her first year anniversary, Kandel had brought a basket of fuzzy slippers to her doctor's oncologist's office for chemotherapy patients.

"They were afraid people would slip in them, but said they could always use candy," she said. "You get parched when you are sitting there [in chemotherapy] getting bored."

She invited her best girlfriends and told them to bring wrapped hard candy instead of gifts.

"I donated the candy and my gratitude passed on their gratitude and passed it forward," she said. "My friends brought bags and bags.

"We made a few toasts and had a nice time together, It was fun," said Kandel. "It made me feel so good to give something back."

Now, Kandel has created a website, Breast Cancer Freebies, that gathers hundreds of free services for cancer patients and survivors: wigs, hats, scholarships, magazines, retreats, hotlines and much more.

But her own survival is never far from her mind.

"I am still in shock sometimes even when I think I had cancer," she said. "It's that big."